logo
HIV prevention a priority after 22 cases among varsity students in 2023, 2024

HIV prevention a priority after 22 cases among varsity students in 2023, 2024

The Star06-06-2025
Ling said the cases caused by unsafe sexual practices show a need for more preventive efforts especially among university students.
JOHOR recorded 22 Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) cases among university students over the past two years, says state executive councillor Ling Tian Soon.
Of this number, 12 cases were recorded last year while 10 were reported in 2023, said the Johor health and environment committee chairman.
'All these cases were found to have been caused by unsafe sexual practices.
'This highlights the need for more preventive efforts among young people, especially university students,' he said during the state assembly sitting.
He was responding to a question from Selamat Takim (BN-Sungai Balang) who had asked about the number of HIV cases among university students in Johor, and the efforts to address the issue.
Ling said the state government was working with educational institutions to improve HIV awareness among youths via the 'Healthy Without AIDS Programme for Teenagers (Prostar) 2.0'.
'The programme aims to educate teenagers and youths about HIV while also empowering them to be advocates for a healthier lifestyle, free from HIV.
'A total of 1,673 university and secondary school students have taken part in activities held under the programme which began in 2023,' he elaborated.
Ling said other initiatives, such as health talks, community forums and awareness campaigns had also been held occasionally to improve understanding of HIV and its prevention.
'Social media and other digital platforms have been used to spread awareness,' he said, adding that the state government was committed to strengthening HIV preventive measures.
Health clinics across the state are also providing free and confidential HIV screening for the public, according to Ling.
'This is to encourage early detection for timely intervention.
'The clinics also provide free and confidential counselling services,' he added. — VENESA DEVI
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Johor's race to retain healthcare workers
Johor's race to retain healthcare workers

The Star

timea day ago

  • The Star

Johor's race to retain healthcare workers

Homeland heroes: Ling (centre row, second from left) and Johor Mentri Besar Datuk Onn Hafiz Ghazi (third from left) taking photos with nurses during the state-level Nurses' Day here. JOHOR BARU: The issue of Johor healthcare workers moving to Singapore for greener pastures will be brought up to the Health Ministry in a meeting soon, says a state executive councillor. Johor health and environment committee chairman Ling Tian Soon, however, said that the matter is not something new. 'We have been informed that this has been happening in the past several years. 'There are hospitals in Singapore offering very attractive packages to healthcare workers in Johor, and some of them have accepted these offers,' he said at a press conference after the state-level Nurses' Day celebration here yesterday. Ling said this in response to a question from the media about claims on social media that Singapore's Health Ministry is actively recruiting Malaysian healthcare workers with lucrative salaries. 'We will engage with the Health Ministry to address the matter. 'This includes increasing the number of trainees and providing attractive offers and opportunities to our healthcare workers so that they feel appreciated in serving in the government. 'We also hope to instil a sense of heart and soul to care for our homeland, so that together, we can offer our services to the country,' he added. Ling said the discussion with the Health Ministry will also include talks on the replacement of healthcare workers who will be transferred to Hospital Pasir Gudang (HPG), which will be opened soon. 'Some of the staff members will be transferred from existing health facilities in Johor to ensure the hospital can begin operations as scheduled on Aug 1.' Ling said that HPG, which is set to be opened in phases, will need experienced healthcare workers. 'As such, there is a need to bring in healthcare workers from other government hospitals, including Hospital Sultanah Aminah (HSA),' he said, adding that about 40 healthcare workers are expected to be transferred from HSA, one of the busiest hospitals in Johor. On another matter, Ling said that the state government will be having discussions with the Cabinet over the construction of Hospital Sultanah Aminah 2. 'The Health Ministry has come up with a proposal outlining the hospital's needs, such as which departments are required and the number of beds. 'The public-private partnership unit needs to prepare a paper on the implementation method, which will then be submitted to the Cabinet,' he added.

Better salaries needed to stop health workers exodus to Singapore
Better salaries needed to stop health workers exodus to Singapore

Sinar Daily

time2 days ago

  • Sinar Daily

Better salaries needed to stop health workers exodus to Singapore

Attractive salary offers from hospitals in Singapore to healthcare workers in Johor is not a new issue. 10 Jul 2025 07:45pm Johor Health and Environment Committee chairman Ling Tian Soon said the intake of more trainees, particularly doctors and nurses, must also be given serious attention. - 123RF photo JOHOR BAHRU - The Ministry of Health (MOH) has been urged to consider offering better salaries to address the issue of healthcare workers choosing to work in Singapore due to attractive offers. Johor Health and Environment Committee chairman Ling Tian Soon said the intake of more trainees, particularly doctors and nurses, must also be given serious attention. He noted that attractive salary offers from hospitals in Singapore to healthcare workers in Johor is not a new issue. "Some hospitals in Singapore are offering very attractive packages to healthcare workers in Johor, and some have already accepted those offers. "What we aim to do is to discuss with MOH on increasing the number of trainees and offering better pay and opportunities so they feel appreciated serving in the public healthcare system,' he said at a press conference after the Johor State-level Nurses Day 2025 celebration here today. Also present was Johor Menteri Besar Datuk Onn Hafiz Ghazi. Ling was commenting on a viral post on social media about job offers for Malaysian doctors in Singapore, with lucrative salaries reaching over RM300,000 a year. He said such efforts to improve remuneration would help boost the commitment of healthcare workers to continue serving in the country. Earlier, some 1,000 nurses attended the Johor State-level Nurses Day celebration, where Onn Hafiz also announced an allocation of RM400,000 for the welfare of nurses in the state. - BERNAMA More Like This

HIV infections could surge worldwide as US pulls funding from global treatment programmes, says UN
HIV infections could surge worldwide as US pulls funding from global treatment programmes, says UN

Malay Mail

time2 days ago

  • Malay Mail

HIV infections could surge worldwide as US pulls funding from global treatment programmes, says UN

JOHANNESBURG, July 10 — The halt to US foreign aid is a 'ticking time bomb' that could reverse decades of hard-fought gains in the fight against AIDS, the United Nations warned today. Around 31.6 million people were on antiretroviral drugs in 2024 and deaths from AIDS-related illnesses had more than halved since 2010 to 630,000 that year, the UNAIDS agency said in a new report. But now infections were likely to shoot up as funding cuts have shuttered prevention and treatment programmes, it said. The United States has been the world's biggest donor of humanitarian assistance but President Donald Trump's abrupt slashing of international aid in February sent the global humanitarian community scrambling to keep life-saving operations afloat. 'We are proud of the achievements, but worried about this sudden disruption reversing the gains we have made,' UNAIDS executive director Winnie Byanyima told AFP ahead of the report's launch in Johannesburg. The agency in April warned that a permanent discontinuation of PEPFAR, the massive US effort to fight HIV/AIDS, would lead to more than six million new infections and an additional 4.2 million AIDS-related deaths in the next four years. This would bring the pandemic back to levels not seen since the early 2000s. 'This is not just a funding gap — it's a ticking time bomb' whose effects are already felt worldwide, Byanyima said in a press release. Over 60 per cent of all women-led HIV organisations surveyed by UNAIDS had lost funding or had to suspend services, the report said. In a striking example, the number of people receiving pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) drugs to prevent transmission in Nigeria fell by over 85 per cent in the first few months of 2025. The 'story of how the world has come together' to fight HIV/AIDS is 'one of the most important stories of progress in global health,' Byanyima told AFP. 'But that great story has been disrupted massively' by Trump's 'unprecedented' and 'cruel' move, she said. 'Priorities can shift, but you do not take away life-saving support from people just like that,' she said. Key medical research affected Crucial medical research on prevention and treatment have also shut down, including many in South Africa which has one of the highest HIV rates in the world and has become a leader in global research. 'Developing countries themselves contribute very much towards the research on HIV and AIDS, and that research serves the whole world,' Byanyima said. In 25 out of 60 low- and middle-income countries surveyed by UNAIDS, governments had found ways to compensate part of the funding shortfall with domestic resources. 'We have to move towards nationally-owned and financed responses,' Byanyima said, calling for debt relief and the reform of international financial institutions to 'free up the fiscal space for developing countries to pay for their own response'. Still, the global HIV response built from grassroots activism was 'resilient by its very nature', she told AFP. 'We moved from people dying every single day to now a point where it is really like a chronic illness,' she said. 'There is no question that the investment has been worth it, and continues to be worth it. It saves lives.' — AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store